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Bohemia, Vojtech Slavnik
(SC. ADALBERTVS), Denarius (silver coin replica) 992 - 994 AD.
OBV: Blessing hand in an astragal,
unclear type.
R: A dot, an arrow, three dots
and a circle in a field divided by a cross in an astragal. ADALBIZCO ?
Adalbert (Czech: Vojtìch,
Polish: Wojciech, Germanic equivalent Adalbert - the
joy of warrior) was a 10th century bishop
of Prague who was martyred in his efforts to convert the Baltic
Prussians. He was later made the patron saint of Bohemia,
Poland,
Hungary,
and Prussia.
He was born of a noble
family in Libice,
Bohemia
about the year 956.
He studied for ten years in Magdeburg under Saint Adalbert.
When Adalbert died, Vojtech took on the name Adalbert Vojtech. The popes sent
him several times to Bohemia. Adalbert
baptized Geza of Hungary
and his son Stephen, and
he also worked to convert the Poles.
Adalbert became the
bishop of Prague. However, he strongly resented the participation of
formally Christian inhabitants in the slave trade. Slavic slaves
were later traded by Jewish traders to the Muslim
empire. He escaped from Prague, despite the Pope's call for him to
return to his episcopal see.
Adalbert Vojtech of Prague had
already in 977
entertained the idea of becoming a missionary in Prussia. After
he had converted Hungary, he was sent by
the Pope to
convert the heathen Prussians. Boleslaw I
Chrobry, duke of Poland, sent soldiers
with Adalbert. The bishop and his followers entered Prussian
territory near Gdansk and went along the
Baltic
Sea coast.
It was a standard
procedure of Christian missionaries to try to chop down sacred oak trees
(see Iconoclasm), which
they had done in many other places, including Saxony. Because the trees
were worshipped and the spirits who were believed to inhabit the trees
were feared for their powers, this was done to demonstrate to the
non-Christians that no supernatural powers protected the trees from the
Christians.
When they did not heed
warnings to stay away from the sacred oak groves, Adalbert was martyred
in April 997
on the Baltic Sea coast
between the Nogat
river and Fischhausen
in Samland/Sambia.
It is recorded that his body was bought back for its weight in gold by Boleslaus I of
Poland.
A few years later
Adalbert was canonized as Saint
Adalbert of Prague. His life has been written about in Vita St
Adalberti by various writers, the earliest was traced to imperial Aachen and
Lüttich,
although it was assumed for many years that the Roman monk John Canaparius
had written the first Vita.
Saint Adalbert's bones
were stored in Gniezno and helped Boleslaus I of
Poland to improve Poland's position in Europe (see Meeting in
Gniezno).
In 1037 Bohemian
duke Bretislav I
retrieved the bones of Saint Adalbert from Gniezno and moved them to Prague,
but in other version he took only part of bone, while rest bones of St.
Adalbert were hiden by Poles. Today Saint Adalbert has two graves, and
which bones are authentic is still not sure. For example - saint has two
skull's - one in Prague, other in Gniezno (stolen in 1923).
(Source: WIKIPEDIA) |